Anyway here is my contemporary critic
Here's a novel that I found very French and a little way suddenly sorry for all chauvinists but it's true that i struggle with the culture of our country which I find sometimes too raw, too precious sometimes. For Kaleb it's a bit raw, a little too realistic can be. Sensitive souls abstain: some scenes are very violent, others are very sulphurous between vacuum passages.
Kaleb Helgusson, 19, is an empath (it can feel and manipulate the emotions dautrui even remotely), bad boy, this is a rather violent character, and that's good because its enemies are not flowers either.
On the other hand, most of Young Adult novels adopt older players between 16 and 20 years but most are still only naive kids where we never really recognized here Kaleb is cornered, he nagit not always responsibly, but at least there is a little more adult in his head with realistic and legitimate reactions; and believe it or not, a more sober look at youth, well it feels good!
The narration considers several slices of life, one side that of Kaleb, then that of Colonel (very black and very cruel character) that intersects with the dAbigail perspective, Succubus, finally we have the diary of David Armstrong, it is very interesting as central.
The story itself is yet another battle between good and evil but turned subtly when we realize that the barrier between the two is rather thin. There are several categories of grants, dailleurs we meet a lot of characters with strange and varied capacities. Kaleb lot commits mischief with his gift that he can not seem to handle and often and bitterly regret. David Armstrong of his side has somehow done good by love of evil
Jai impression that this first volume only served QuĂ develop the plot and lay the foundation for the real story that will unfold in the second volume: Abigail, the male in the skin not to mention the tome 3: Fusion, all's well that ends badly already available for pre-Amazon. This is why my book left an impression double-edged: in the first part, I am quite annoyed, and my very end seemed exciting and made me want to read the next volume, which for once promises to be more eventful ( I hope).
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